The Humanities traditionally includes disciplines
like Art History, English, Film, Music, Philosophy,
and Religion. The Dartmouth Writing Program
website states that "Humanities as a field of
study deals with questions for which there are no
definitive answers." Researchers in these
fields traditionally work with some sort of text,
which can include both visual and written components.
The goal of this work is to provide interpretations,
not an objective truth.

This page contains links to resources for writing genres commonly used by researchers in the Humanities. Specific disciplines in the Humanities may handle each one in slightly different ways.

For a clear overview of writing in the Humanities, see this page on Dartmouth Writing Program website.

Reviews/Critiques

A review examines and evaluates a text, describing what about it works well and what about it could be improved. This focus on evaluation differs a critique from a traditional book report, which usually summarizes the contents of a text without evaluating them.

Annotated Bibliographies

An annotated bibliography is a list of sources on a particular topic. In addition to providing the bibliographic information on the source, each entry includes a summary of the source's content and, sometimes, a critique of the source. Annotated bibliographies are useful for researchers who want to get the sense of the work in a field.

Abstracts

Many significant research publications begin with an abstract that provides
an overview of the research and its findings. Scholars
also have to write abstracts in order for their
work to be considered for conference presentations
or publication.

Research Proposals

A research proposal presents a plan for conducting a project. If they are planned and written well, they can make the process of conducting the actual project, and writing up the final results, much easier.